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UK Police Blame Microsoft Copilot for Intelligence Mistake

The chief constable of one of Britain's largest police forces has admitted that Microsoft's Copilot AI assistant made a mistake in a football (soccer) intelligence report. From a report: The report, which led to Israeli football fans being banned from a match last year, included a nonexistent match between West Ham and Maccabi Tel Aviv. Copilot hallucinated the game and West Midlands Police included the error in its intelligence report without fact checking it. "On Friday afternoon I became aware that the erroneous result concerning the West Ham v Maccabi Tel Aviv match arose as result of a use of Microsoft Co Pilot [sic]," says Craig Guildford, chief constable of West Midlands Police, in a letter to the Home Affairs Committee earlier this week. Guildford previously denied in December that the West Midlands Police had used AI to prepare the report, blaming "social media scraping" for the error.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Microsoft Pledges Full Power Costs, No Tax Breaks in Response To AI Data Center Backlash

Microsoft announced Tuesday what it calls a "community first" initiative for its AI data centers, pledging to pay full electricity costs and reject local property tax breaks following months of growing opposition from residents facing higher power bills. The announcement in Washington, D.C. marks a clear departure from past practices; Microsoft has previously accepted tax abatements for data centers in Ohio and Iowa. Brad Smith, Microsoft's president, said the company has been developing the initiative since September. Residential power prices in data center hubs like Virginia, Illinois, and Ohio jumped 12-16% over the past year, faster than the U.S. average. Three Democratic senators launched an investigation last month into whether tech giants are raising residential bills. Microsoft also pledged a 40% improvement in water efficiency by 2030 and committed to replenishing more water than it uses in each district where it operates.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Microsoft Pulls the Plug On Its Free, Two-Decade-Old Windows Deployment Toolkit

Microsoft has abruptly retired the Microsoft Deployment Toolkit, a free platform that IT administrators have relied on to deploy Windows operating systems and applications for more than two decades. The retirement, reports the Register, came with "immediate" notice, meaning no more fixes, support, security patches, or updates, and the download packages may be removed from official distribution channels.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Microsoft May Soon Allow IT Admins To Uninstall Copilot

Microsoft is testing a new Windows policy that lets IT administrators uninstall Microsoft Copilot from managed devices. The change rolls out via Windows Insider builds and works through standard management tools like Intune and SCCM. BleepingComputer reports: The new policy will apply to devices where the Microsoft 365 Copilot and Microsoft Copilot are both installed, the Microsoft Copilot app was not installed by the user, and the Microsoft Copilot app was not launched in the last 28 days. "Admins can now uninstall Microsoft Copilot for a user in a targeted way by enabling a new policy titled RemoveMicrosoftCopilotApp," the Windows Insider team said. "If this policy is enabled, the Microsoft Copilot app will be uninstalled, once. Users can still re-install if they choose to. This policy is available on Enterprise, Pro, and EDU SKUs. To enable this policy, open the Group policy editor and go to: User Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> Windows AI -> Remove Microsoft Copilot App."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Microsoft Cancels Plans To Rate Limit Exchange Online Bulk Emails

Microsoft has canceled plans to impose a daily limit of 2,000 external recipients on Exchange Online bulk email senders. From a report: The change was announced in April 2024, when Microsoft said that it would add new External Recipient Rate (ERR) limits starting January 2025 to fight spam, with plans to begin enforcing the limit on cloud-hosted mailboxes of existing tenants between July and December 2025. As explained last year, this new Mailbox External Recipient Rate Limit was designed to prevent Microsoft 365 customers from abusing Exchange Online resources and to restrict unfair usage. However, on Tuesday, Microsoft announced that the Exchange Online bulk emailing rate limit is being canceled indefinitely, following negative customer feedback.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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'Everyone Hates OneDrive, Microsoft's Cloud App That Steals Then Deletes All Your Files'

Microsoft's OneDrive cloud storage service has drawn renewed criticism for a particularly frustrating behavior pattern that can leave users without access to their local files after the service automatically activates during Windows updates. Author Jason Pargin recently outlined the problem: Windows updates can enable OneDrive backup without any plain-language warning or opt-out option, and the service then quietly begins uploading the contents of a user's computer to Microsoft's servers. The trouble begins when users attempt to disable OneDrive Backup. According to Pargin, turning off the feature can result in local files being deleted, leaving behind only a desktop icon labeled "Where are my files?" Users can redownload their files from Microsoft's servers, but attempting to then delete Microsoft's copies triggers another deletion of the local files. The only workaround requires users to hunt down YouTube tutorials that walk through the steps, as the relevant options are buried in menus and none clearly describe their function in plain English. Pargin compared the experience to a ransomware attack.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Everyone hates OneDrive, Microsoft's cloud app that steals then deletes all your files - Boing Boing

Des nouvelles de cette saloperie de Windows 11 : Non seulement Microsoft utilise des dark patterns pour inciter les utilisateurs à autoriser Microsoft à récupérer vos fichiers privés, mais en prime si vous supprimez vos fichiers de OneDrive, cela les supprime localement.
C'est en gros le fonctionnement d'un ransomeware: Il utilise de l'ingénierie sociale pour récupérer vos fichiers, et vous les fait perdre si vous essayez de vous échapper du système.
Franchement, si vous le pouvez, virez Windows.
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Microsoft CEO Begs Users to Stop Calling It "Slop"

Le patron de Microsoft n'aime pas le terme "slop".
Comme beaucoup d'autres, je propose donc qu'on utilise "Microslop" à la place de "Microsoft".

Nadella n'est pas d'accord ? On s'en fou.
Lui il s'en fout bien totalement que les utilisateurs de ses produits ne veuillent pas d'IA. 🤷‍♂️
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Microsoft Office Is Now 'Microsoft 365 Copilot App'

Longtime reader joshuark shares a report: As spotted by Bluesky user DodgerFanLA, going to Office.com now greets you with the following helpful explainer: "The Microsoft 365 Copilot app (formerly Office) lets you create, share, and collaborate all in one place with your favorite apps now including Copilot.*" Never has an asterisk been more relevant to me than following the words "your favorite apps now including Copilot." About a decade ago, hardware company Corsair attempted to pivot from its classic logo -- a subtle trio of ship sails -- to a newer, edgier look, a pair of crossed swords that gave off regrettable '2000s tribal tattoo' energy. The rebrand didn't last long: after a fierce outcry from people who correctly thought the new logo sucked, Corsair swapped to a refreshed take on the sail logo, which it's been using ever since. Corsair was established in 1994, and made about $1.4 billion last year -- which I bring up because today Microsoft, a slightly bigger company, has slipped on its own rebranding banana peel. The company is seemingly all but ditching the Office name -- which it introduced four years before Corsair existed, and which drove more than $30 billion in revenue just last quarter -- with a catchy new name: "Microsoft 365 Copilot app." The company had already downplayed the Office name, despite it being perhaps the most universally recognized software in existence, by renaming its cloud version of Word, Powerpoint, etc. Office 365 in 2010, then Microsoft 365 in 2017. Now when you want to open up a Word document, you can get to them by launching the Microsoft 365 Copilot app. Intuitive! Should Microsoft just go ahead and rebrand Windows, the only piece of its arsenal more famous than Office, as Copilot, too? I do actually think we're not far off from that happening. Facebook rebranded itself "Meta" when it thought the metaverse would be the next big thing, so it seems just as plausible that Microsoft could name the next version of Windows something like "Windows with Copilot" or just "Windows AI." Copilot is the app for launching the other apps, but it's also a chatbot inside the apps. Any questions? Correction: Office hasn't been renamed to "Microsoft 365 Copilot app." The Verge adds: The confusion comes from Microsoft's own Office.com domain, which for the past year has acted as a way to push businesses and consumers to use the Microsoft 365 Copilot app. This app is a hub app that provides access to Copilot, as well as all the Office apps. Microsoft used to call this app simply Office, before the company rebranded Office to Microsoft 365 in 2022. If you visit Office.com you'll see a big welcome to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app, and a note from Microsoft that would confuse anyone not following the company's confusing branding: "The Microsoft 365 Copilot app (formerly Office)..." That mention of "formerly Office" is Microsoft referring to the very old Office app that launched in 2019 as a way to try and convince people to use online versions of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. Until a year ago it used to be called the Microsoft 365 app. Microsoft then announced it was rebranding its Microsoft 365 app in November 2024 to a Copilot one, which I and everyone else were very confused at. The new app icon and name -- Microsoft 365 Copilot -- then rolled out on January 15th last year to Windows, iOS, and Android users.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Windows 11 : la chienlit de 2025 - Next

« Que se passe-t-il en ce moment avec Windows 11 ? Depuis quelques mois, Microsoft semble accumuler les boulettes, dans une avalanche de problèmes techniques, alors même que Windows 10 n’a plus de support. Les annonces sur l'IA et la montée en puissance de Linux sur les jeux n'arrangent pas la situation. »

Voir aussi : https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/2025-has-been-an-awful-year-for-windows-11-with-infuriating-bugs-and-constant-unwanted-features
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Microsoft wants to replace its entire C and C++ codebase • The Register

Microsoft veut virer le C/C++ de ses produits et tout réécrire en Rust.
Wokay.
Mais tu ne réécris pas des centaines de millions de lignes de code, avec toutes leurs quirks, en étant sûr que ça aura le même comportement, en claquant des doigts.

Ah oui pardon il y a l'IA magique.

"‘1 engineer, 1 month, 1 million lines of code."
Je ne vois pas comment ça peut être viable.
Je prédis une augmentation des problèmes dans les produits Microsoft.
Fuyez !
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« J’ai besoin d’un cloud souverain », le nouveau plan d’Airbus pour couper Microsoft de ses données sensibles risque d’être tué dans l’œuf

Dans un entretien accordé au site britannique The Register, Catherine Jestin, vice‑présidente exécutive du numérique chez Airbus, annonce que le géant de l’aéronautique français s’apprête à lancer un appel d’offres majeur. L’objectif ? Migrer ses charges de travail critiques vers un cloud européen souverain. Cette transition devra cependant relever des défis immenses.

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Satya Nadella durcit le ton face aux dirigeants de Microsoft : embarquez dans l'aventure de l'IA ou partez, le PDG continue la mutation du fonctionnement de l'entreprise

« Mais en coulisses, les employés racontent une tout autre histoire : l'entreprise chercherait à remplacer autant d'emplois que possible par des agents d'IA. Pourtant, les développeurs affirment que l'IA de Microsoft est loin d'être fiable. »
Tarés. Ils sont tarés.

Ce qui est certain avec ça, c'est que les anciens de Microsoft - ceux qui connaissent vraiment bien les produits et les font tourner - vont vouloir fuire. Et devinez quoi ?
« Trois cadres de Microsoft ont déclaré que Rajesh Jha, responsable de longue date d'Office et de Windows, envisageait de prendre sa retraite. Des initiés évoquent également la possibilité que Charlie Bell, qui dirige la cybersécurité chez Microsoft, prenne sa retraite. »

Fuyez les produits de cette boîte !
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Microsoft Made Another Copilot Ad Where Nothing Actually Works

Microsoft's latest holiday ad for its Copilot AI assistant features a 30-second montage of users seamlessly syncing smart home lights to music, scaling recipes for large gatherings, and parsing HOA guidelines -- none of which the software can actually perform reliably when put to the test. The Verge methodically tested each prompt shown in the ad and found that Copilot repeatedly hallucinated interface elements that didn't exist, claimed to highlight on-screen buttons when it hadn't, and abandoned calculations midway through. The smart home interface shown in the ad belongs to "Relecloud," a fictional company Microsoft uses in internal case studies. A Microsoft spokesperson confirmed that both the HOA document and the inflatable reindeer photo were fabricated for the advertisement. The ad closes with Santa Claus asking Copilot why toy production is behind schedule. Further reading: Talking To Windows' Copilot AI Makes a Computer Feel Incompetent.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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LG Will Let TV Owners Delete Microsoft Copilot After Customer Outcry

LG said it will let owners of its TVs delete Microsoft's Copilot shortcut after several reports highlighted the unremovable icon. In a statement to The Verge, LG says the company "respects consumer choice and will take steps to allow users to delete the shortcut icon if they wish." From the report: Last week, a user on the r/mildlyinfuriating subreddit posted an image of the Microsoft Copilot icon in their lineup of apps on an LG TV, with no option to delete it. "My LG TV's new software update installed Microsoft Copilot, which cannot be deleted," the post says. The post garnered more than 36,000 upvotes as people grow more frustrated with AI popping up just about everywhere. Both LG and Samsung announced plans to add Microsoft's Copilot AI assistant to their TVs in January, but it appears to be popping up on LG TVs following a recent update to webOS. [LG spokesperson Chris De Maria] clarifies that the icon is a "shortcut" to the Microsoft Copilot web app that opens in the TV's web browser, rather than "an application-based service embedded in the TV." He also adds that "features such as microphone input are activated only with the customer's explicit consent." There's no word on when LG will roll out the ability to delete the Copilot icon.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Après 26 ans à faire la sourde oreille, Microsoft va enfin rectifier cette « grave négligence »

Microsoft va prochainement abandonner un système de chiffrement obsolète qui était pris en charge par défaut depuis 26 ans. Nommé RC4, ce système était devenu l'élément clé de plusieurs piratages dévastateurs et faisait l'objet de vives critiques, notamment de la part de législateurs américains.

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